Sky Kid Deluxe
Sky Kid Deluxe | |
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Screenshot | |
Developer(s) | Namco |
Publisher(s) | Namco |
Platform(s) | Arcade |
Release date(s) |
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Genre(s) | Horizontal scrolling shooter |
Mode(s) | Up to 2 players simultaneously |
Cabinet | Upright, cabaret, and cocktail |
Arcade system | Namco System 86 |
CPU | 2x Motorola M6809 @ 1.536 MHz, 1x Hitachi HD63701 @ 1.536 MHz |
Sound | 1x Yamaha YM2151 @ 3.57958 MHz, 1x Namco CUS30 @ 96 kHz |
Display | Horizontal orientation, Raster, 288 x 224 resolution |
Sky Kid Deluxe (スカイキッドデラックス Sukai Kiddo Derakkusu) is a horizontal scrolling shooter arcade game that was released by Namco in 1986. It was the first game to run on the company's then-new System 86 hardware and as the name suggests, it is the sequel to Sky Kid, which had been released in the previous year. It was also the first game from the company to use a Yamaha YM2151 FM sound chip for its music. The gameplay is more difficult than the original, and it also introduces several new enemies and missions. It was included in the Japan-only Namco Collection for Microsoft Windows and received its first ever worldwide port to a console as part of Namco Museum Virtual Arcade for the Xbox 360, but did not include the second player's character Blue Max.
Differences from the original
- As mentioned above, Sky Kid Deluxe used the enhanced System 86 hardware (the original ran on the older Namco Pac-Land hardware) which allowed for greater variety in simultaneous colors (its palette is twice the size as that of the original; 512 as opposed to 256).
- The color of the sky is no longer only light blue for the whole game, but a range of different colors, including blues, grays and reds.
- Four new missions (numbered X1 to X4) have been inserted between the twenty-one original missions, for a total of twenty-five missions.
- Snow falls from the top of the screen (only in missions X1 and X3), which scrolls with the two Sky Kids as they are flying to the left.
- Several new enemies and mission targets have been introduced (one of whom, known as the "Kaminari Kid", cannot be killed by any means).
- Instead of only one background song produced by a Namco CUS30, Deluxe has two songs (produced by the aforementioned Yamaha YM2151).
External links
- Sky Kid Deluxe at the Killer List of Videogames
- Sky Kid Deluxe at the Arcade History database
- Sky Kid Deluxe guide at StrategyWiki